Sunday, January 6, 2013

Belkin introduces WeMo light switch, control your household lighting from your Android device

Android Central

Home automation is the stuff nerdy dreams are made of, and Belkin is today introducing a new device to bring a little part of that to life. The WeMo Light Switch, being displayed at CES in Las Vegas, is a replacement for your standard household light switches with WiFi connectivity. The cool part -- it'll be controllable from your Android device. 

Android Central @ CES The WeMo connectivity means you can turn lights on or off from anywhere, schedule an on/off time, and doesn't require your Android device to be connected to the same WiFi network in order to work. So, you leave the office late, it's dark, and as you pull up on the driveway you can turn on the lights so you don't trip over the dog. OK, not the best example perhaps, but you get the idea. 

Android connectivity has been a much asked for feature of WeMo's existing, iOS compatible only, range of home automation devices. With the arrival of the WeMo Light Switch and the app into the Google Play Store, connectivity with their other devices will be opened up to Android users. An open beta will begin in February for users of the Samsung Galaxy S3 and "other leading devices." The Light Switch will become available this Summer. 

Source: Belkin



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/r5UCiAiKyvc/story01.htm

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Video: Obama reportedly to tap Hagel for defense spot



>>> back from his vacation tonight and fresh off the fiscal showdown, he is already gerding for what's expected to be the next political showdown. tonight, nbc news can confirm he will wade right back into the fray tomorrow by nominating former senator chuck hagel as the next secretary of defense. at face value , the pick of a long-time republican lawmaker for the job could be seen as a rare act of bipartisanship ain a sharply divided town. tonight, opponents on both sides of the aisle are sharpening their claws for what could be a testy confirmation fight. nbc white house correspondent peter alexander joins us from washington now with more. hello, peter.

>> reporter: lester, good evening to you. with the fiscal cliff crisis barely in our rearview mirror earthquake the white house 's decision to pick chuck haig.as secretary of defense is likely to ignite a contentious confirmation battle. congress is out of session this week, but already, talk of the pick is generating stiff opposition. fresh off his hawaiian vacation, president obama is already facing heated debate over the expected pick of former nebraska senator chuck hagel for secretary of defense.

>> a person who has a resume that includes service on the foreign relations committee as well as the intelligence committee . yes,'s se he's a serious kand dad. .

>> reporter: hailing would be the first enlisted soldier, a purple heart decorated vietnam veteran to be secretary of defense. the end pen dent-minded member clashed with his own party, opposing the iraq war . and lately fiercely criticizing president obama 's iraq troop surge . hagel angered pro-israel groups with his opposition to unilateral sanction against iran and comments critical to what he calledout wish lobby p

>> you have somebody very an tag nflic toward the state of israel and the issue wes jointly face u there is no jewish lobby you there is a pro- israel lobby .

>> reporter: on "meet the press," the president weighed in on the choice.

>> my number one criteria is who is going to do the best job in helping secure america.

>> anything disqualify him?

>> not that i see. i have served with chuck hagel . i know him. he is a patriot.

>> reporter: even with the fiscal cliff fight behind him, the president faces another looming showdown over the nation's debt ceiling, its boor rowing limit. today, senate minority leader mitch mcconnell insisted the tax issue is resolved but demanded spending cuts.

>> i wish the president would lead us in this discussion rather than putting himself in a position of having to be dragged kicking and screaming to the table to discuss the single biggest issue confronting our future.

>> reporter: also tonight, the -- an administration official tells us that the president is likely to name his cia director as early as tomorrow to succeed david petraeus . on your screen, you see the two top candidates right now, homeland security and counterterrorism advisory john brennan as well as the man you see on the left there, the acting cia head, mike morell.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/50381550/

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Sectarianism will prolong instability in Iraq: Saudi Arabia

RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia on Saturday warned Iraq against sectarian extremism after two weeks of protests by Sunni Muslims against Baghdad's Shi'ite-led government.

The street protests across Iraq's Sunni heartland have strained the Arab state's fragile political balance and renewed fears of intensified sectarian strife.

"We are convinced that Iraq will not stabilize until it starts handling issues without sectarian extremism... Until these issues are addressed, we don't think there will ever be stability in Iraq, which pains us," Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal told a news conference in Riyadh.

Iraq's Arab majority is mostly Shi'ite but the country was dominated by Sunnis under former strongman Saddam Hussein and much of the fighting since he was deposed has fallen along sectarian lines.

Sunni Saudi Arabia has a tense relationship with Baghdad and senior princes have previously described Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki as being in hock to Shi'ite Iran, in comments to U.S. diplomats released by WikiLeaks.

Saudi Arabia, the world's top oil exporter, is locked in a struggle for regional influence with fellow OPEC-member Iran, backing opposing sides in Syria and Lebanon, where Shi'ite parties are allied to Tehran.

Riyadh also accuses Tehran of fomenting unrest in Bahrain and Yemen, and of instigating protests among Saudi Arabia's own Shi'ite minority, charges Iran denies.

Former Saudi intelligence head Prince Muqrin described Maliki as "an Iranian 100 percent" in comments to visiting U.S. officials relayed in a July 2008 embassy cable released by the WikiLeaks website.

(Reporting By Angus McDowall; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sectarianism-prolong-instability-iraq-saudi-arabia-141123772.html

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Saturday, January 5, 2013

Exclusive: U.S. House panel probes SEC spending on consultants

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House Oversight Committee is probing the Securities and Exchange Commission's spending on outside consultants from Booz Allen Hamilton, saying it is concerned about possible waste.

In a January 3 letter to SEC Chairman Elisse Walter, shown to Reuters, House Oversight Chairman Darrell Issa gave the agency until January 17 to turn over a lengthy set of documents laying out payments made to Booz Allen and details on how the SEC chose to hire the consulting firm, among other matters.

Reuters first reported in late February of last year that the SEC had spent millions of dollars hiring Booz Allen consultants to help streamline the agency, leading some agency insiders to question whether the SEC was getting its money's worth.

At the time the story was published, the SEC had spent over $8.5 million in less than one year on consultants to advise on reforming workflows and back-office operations. The consultants were paid anywhere from $100 to over $300 an hour.

In the letter, Issa said he was concerned that the use of the consultants creates an "obvious overlap" between their work and the responsibilities and authority of the SEC's Chief Operating Officer, Jeffrey Heslop. Heslop was tapped by former SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro to help improve the operations of the agency and oversaw the hiring of the Booz Allen consultants.

That overlap, Issa said, raises "serious questions about the necessity of the consultants, duplication of efforts, and outright waste."

He added that in addition to the documents, he wants Heslop to give his committee's staff a briefing on the consultants' work.

SEC spokesman John Nester said: "We share Chairman Issa's interest in effective management and appreciate the opportunity to demonstrate that.

"We have been transparent throughout in communicating the results of the organizational reform efforts encompassed by the Congressional mandate, and our reforms to date have resulted in significant cost savings."

A Booz Allen representative did not respond to requests for comment.

EX-SEC WATCHDOG HAD CONCERNS

Issa noted that the findings in Reuters' report about the hiring of the Booz Allen consultants are "broadly compatible" with allegations recently made in a lawsuit against the SEC filed by former SEC Assistant Inspector General for Investigations David Weber.

Weber had been placed on leave from the SEC last year after employees complained he spoke openly about wanting to carry a firearm at work.

He was later fired, and then in November he sued the SEC, claiming the firing was in retaliation for his efforts to shed light on a variety of improprieties at the agency.

In his lawsuit, Weber said that prior to being terminated, he had been investigating whether Heslop had improperly steered consulting work to Booz Allen.

Weber claims he learned that Heslop had a personal friend at the company and later had pushed the SEC to hire Booz Allen Hamilton even though other SEC senior officials did not think it was necessary. Weber added that he referred his findings to the Department of Justice.

Heslop did not immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

Nester said that the SEC plans to "vigorously contest" Weber's lawsuit.

(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Gary Hill)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-u-house-panel-probes-sec-spending-consultants-214108123--sector.html

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Email reminders encourage end-of-life talks

(Reuters) - Email alerts may encourage cancer doctors to talk with terminally ill patients about their end-of-life wishes and to record those preferences in their medical records, according to a U.S. study.

Oncologists who were reminded each time one of their patients started a new chemotherapy regimen were more than twice as likely to note patients' wishes before they became very sick, said researchers in a report published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

"If, God forbid, the patient does end up in a medical emergency and it's unclear what their medical wishes are, then it's always a difficult situation for the doctor and the family," said Jennifer Temel, who led the study at Massachusetts General Hospital cancer Center in Boston.

Doctors tend to wait for a patient's condition to get much worse before bringing up their end-of-life wishes, such as whether they want health care staff to use CPR and other measures to try and prolong their lives, she said. But reminders may initiate those discussions earlier.

"Patients in the inpatient settings are in crisis, and it's a highly emotional state for patients and their families," Temel told Reuters Health.

"Everybody thinks it's better to have these discussions when people are less ill."

Temel and her colleagues surveyed doctors and nurse practitioners about their end-of-life conversations with people with incurable cancer, including how the health care providers would like to be prompted to have those conversations.

Then, the researchers designed and tested an email system that reminded doctors when they were seeing patients who were coming in to start a new chemo regimen.

The study included 100 people with advanced lung cancer. A year after the email alerts began, just over one-third of the patients had end-of-life wishes documented in their electronic health records.

In comparison, during the pre-alert period, fewer than 15 percent of people diagnosed with incurable lung cancer had had their wishes written down before they were hospitalized, the researchers said.

During both time periods, most patients who had end-of-life wishes recorded were listed as do not resuscitate (DNR) or do not intubate (DNI), meaning they didn't want doctors to take aggressive measures to keep them alive at the end.

Not only are such measures sometimes against a patient's wishes, they can also be very expensive.

"In the absence of these discussions, patients may receive unwanted, overly aggressive care that incurs cost for the patient and society and is associated with decreased quality of life for the patients and family, and worsened bereavement adjustment for caregivers," wrote Jamie Von Roenn in an editorial published with the study.

The change seen with email alerts "is an improvement, but we still have a long way to go," added Von Roenn, a palliative medicine specialist from Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. SOURCE: http://bit.ly/S6L6HF

(Reporting from New York by Genevra Pittman at Reuters Health; editing by Elaine Lies)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/email-reminders-encourage-end-life-talks-015747217.html

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India anti-rape protesters: Don't just get angry, do something

At a moment when many angry Indians are demanding that the rapists of a young woman who died this week be hung, one group encourages women to tackle social attitudes.

By Vaishnavi Chandrashekhar,?Correspondent / January 4, 2013

An Indian student shouts slogans seeking punishment for rapists of the 23-year-old student, during a protest in Bangalore, India, Friday.

Aijaz Rahi/AP

Enlarge

Among the many anti-rape protests that have been held in Indian cities over the past few weeks, something has stood out at a demonstration this week: Protest signs that didn?t cry shame or call for the death penalty, but pledged personal action.

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?I pledge to intervene when I see a woman being harassed,? read one slogan on signs held by both men and women on New Year's Day. Another sign held by a young woman read, ?I pledge to stare back.??

The ?Safe City Pledge? demonstrations were organized by?a collective called Blank Noise, which has been talking about sexual harassment in India for almost a decade now.

It is that long experience, says founder Jasmeen Patheja, that accounts for their unusual slogans. Amid the calls for better policing to prevent violent crime against women, the group wanted to also highlight how everyone contributes to ? and can thus help change ? a culture of sexism.

?It?s easy to blame the government and the police, but they also represent certain social mindsets, attitudes that we may be perpetuating,? Ms. Patheja says.

In recent weeks, some of those attitudes have been on display as political and civic leaders have faulted Westernization (read: sexual permissiveness) for violence against women.

On Friday, a leader from a Hindu nationalist party said that rapes ?happen in India, not Bharat? (the Hindi name for the country), while another suggested that women are being punished for ?crossing the line.? A survey from earlier this year showed that a fair chunk of both Indian men and women believed that wife beating was acceptable. ? ? ? ? ??

A younger, urban generation isn?t necessarily free from these attitudes either. ?We may all contribute to the problem in invisible ways,? Patheja says. ?When we say ?Boys will be boys,? or when we share sexist jokes or make mothers and sisters part of [curse words].?

One of the most common problems that Indian women face is harassment in public spaces.

?Eve teasing,? the lighthearted term used for everything from lewd comments to groping to stalking, is so routine that when Patheja started Blank Noise as part of a virtual project at Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology in Bangalore in 2003, she found few of her peers wanted to talk about it.

?There was a sense that it was just part of life, that there was nothing you could do about it,? she says. ? ? ? ? ???

Patheja and others started a blog to provide an anonymous space for women to share their experiences. They also began organizing public events. The idea was not to be an advocacy group, says Patheja, but to ?trigger a public dialogue that wasn?t didactic, through a series of approaches both blog-based and on-the-ground interventions.? Blank Noise also encouraged young women to confront street harassment in an effort to ?reclaim the city.?

That approach challenges the conventional idea that women should protect themselves by staying away from the public sphere, and a recent trend among the Indian middle-class to segregate themselves from chaotic urban environments through gated communities and private transport. Signs at Tuesday?s demonstration included pledges to ?use public transport even when private transport was available.?

Today, the Blank Noise project has a presence across nine cities, hundreds of volunteers and a large Facebook presence, though getting boots on the ground remains a challenge. More than 10,000 people were invited via Facebook to take part in Tuesday?s protest across the country.

In Mumbai, about 30 showed up. ?It?s easier to click ?like? and more difficult to get out on the street,? says Patheja. ?But we don?t worry much about that anymore. Even that one click means that someone has decided to engage.??

What is most important, she suggests, is the change she has seen in the past decade. Last month, the supreme court called for wide-ranging measures to curb harassment in public places.? ?There is now a greater willingness to talk about the issue,? she says, ?and less of an inclination to trivialize it.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/nyMEx5PRbyA/India-anti-rape-protesters-Don-t-just-get-angry-do-something

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Friday, January 4, 2013

Forest Moon Theater auditions for Academia Nuts by Greg Kreutz ...

Forest Moon Theater, Wake Forest?s community theater, is beginning their inaugural season with open auditions for their first production in 2013, Academia Nuts by Greg Kreutz.

Auditions will be held on Thursday, January 10 at 7pm. Registration begins at 6:30pm.

What happens when a spirited woman, who?s down on her luck, meets a scholarly professor of poetry, who?s living in the historic home of a dead poet? Combine that with a case of mistaken identities, romance, and an academic treasure hunt, and you have a very nutty situation comedy. Academia Nuts will give you a week?s worth of good laughs, proving once again that you never know what?s going to walk in your front door.

Plot Summary
Professor Peter Smedforson lives in a quiet New England college town, in the former home of poet E.R. Lennox whose writings are the subject of his scholarly life?s work. Reclusive Peter finds his sedate life is suddenly turned upside down when a couple in search of a lost manuscript and an adventuresome lady, down on her luck, find themselves at his home. Amid the chaos, the discovery of the manuscript and the revelation of its surprising secret provide a hilarious climax to this urbane and quick witted comedy written by Greg Kruetz.

Forest MON THEATRE WKE FORESTCharacters
Tammi
Late 20?s ? late 30?s
Single, full of life, fun-loving, adventuresome with a positive outlook and a romantic nature

Judith
Mid 30?s ? early 40?s
Serious, proper, intellectual, academic single woman with aspirations for a relationship with Peter

Stewart
Mid 30?s ? early 40?s
Judith?s ex-husband, looking for the easy path to fame and fortune

Peter
Late 40?s ? late 50?s
Professor of American Literature with a special interest in one poet, whose historic home he occupies. Peter is totally unprepared for the whirlwind escapades that begin when Tammi seeks shelter at his house.

Visit the theater?s website at www.forestmoontheater.org for complete information.

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Source: http://triangleartsandentertainment.org/2013/01/forest-moon-theater-auditions-for-academia-nuts-by-greg-kreutz/

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